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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Short and sweet, but spine-tingling and suspenseful.
It's Christmas Eve 1957, and an English pilot is flying his single-seat fighter from Germany, on his way home for Christmas. But when the electrical circuits fail, he is suddenly on his own in a lonely sky, unable to contact the men below who alone can guide him home through the foggy skies. With fuel running out, radio contact gone, and navigation impossible, and when...
Published on October 5, 2001 by Godly Gadfly

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars What rhymes with Kindle?
I bought "The Sheperd", downloaded and read it in less than 40 minutes. Why, you ask? It weighs less than 100 pages, some 40% of which are photographs that don't come across on the Kindle screen. And, yes, it costs the full $ 9.99; and, no, there was nothing in the advertisement that alerted you to this fact. But now I figured out why the Amazon marketeers came up with...
Published 6 months ago by Ralph Bloch


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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Short and sweet, but spine-tingling and suspenseful., October 5, 2001
This review is from: Shepherd (Hardcover)
It's Christmas Eve 1957, and an English pilot is flying his single-seat fighter from Germany, on his way home for Christmas. But when the electrical circuits fail, he is suddenly on his own in a lonely sky, unable to contact the men below who alone can guide him home through the foggy skies. With fuel running out, radio contact gone, and navigation impossible, and when it seems that he's destined to ditch only to freeze to death in a deserted sea, a miraculous saviour appears. A World War 2 style plane appears out of the gloom, and its brave pilot "shepherds" the helpless flyer down through the frosty night sky towards safety. Will he succeed? And why does the airport seem deserted? And who is the mysterious shepherd?

Although "The Shepherd" is a very short novel that can easily be read in under an hour, it doesn't hinder Forsyth from capturing your attention. He cleverly heightens the intensity of the action and suspense by using the first person point of view. The stricken pilot's fears and bewilderment quickly become your own, until they are resolved in a spine-chilling last-page climax that raises as many questions as it answers.

The gripping plot is marred only by a few incidences of blasphemy. But the paperback edition is beautifully enhanced by Lou Feck's full-page black and white illustrations. "The Shepherd" may be a departure from Forsyth's usual fare in that it is a short and sweet Christmas story that exploits the season's fondness for supernatural miracles. But it lacks none of his trademark spine-tingling suspense. Unlike the pilot, it will be a while before you come back down to earth after reading this one!

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars There's more to The Shepherd than meets the eye, December 24, 2002
By 
Gregory F. Haas (Shingle Springs, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I first became aware of this gem when I was given a now out-of-print audiobook of the same. I acquired the book in hardback shortly thereafter. As others have observed, this masterpiece stands quite on its own as a simple and engaging suspense yarn. But Forsyth is reaching deeper here. Set against the backdrop of Christmas Eve in 1957, the story is detailed with rich and often mysterious religious allegory. Consider, for example, flight Lt. Marks, Old Joe, Jake King, and, most importantly, the now abandoned Air Force Base named Minton, with all its "many rooms". None of this is spoon fed to us, however, and there are a number of dots that we as readers must connect for ourselves. Originally written as a Christmas present for his wife, The Shepherd is most certainly a gift for us as well. There is a magical quality to the story that will make it an annual must for every reader. NOTE: If you can obtain the unabridged audio reading of the story by the great Robert Powell, you'll never spend a Chistmas without it.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WHERE'S JIMMY STEWART WHEN WE NEED HIM?:, January 16, 2006
This review is from: The Shepherd (Hardcover)
It's too bad Jimmy Stewart is gone, because this book is pretty much a cross between The Spirit of St. Louis and It's a Wonderful Life and he -- a pilot like Mr. Forsyth -- would have made a Christmas classic of it. On Christmas Eve 1957, a young RAF pilot takes off from Germany in his Vampire to fly home to Britain. But first his instrumentation fails on him, including the radio, and then he flies into increasing fog, making it awfully unlikely he'll avoid crashing into the North Sea, nevermind land safely. This prompts a dark night of the soul:

Ten minutes went by, nearly two complete triangles. I had not prayed, not really prayed, for many years, and the practice came hard. Lord, please get me out of this bloody mess... No, you mustn't talk like that to Him. "Our Father, which art in Heaven --" He'd heard that a thousand times, and would be hearing it another thousand times tonight. What do you say to Him when you want help? Please, God, make somebody notice me up here; please make someone see me flying in triangles, and send up a shepherd to help me down to a safe landing. Please help me, and I promise -- What on earth could I promise Him? He had no need of me, and I, who now had such need of Him, had taken no notice of Him for so long that He'd probably forgotten all about me.

Well, you pretty much know how the rest of it goes, but Mr. Forsyth handles it all quite deftly and the novella certainly belongs on your annual Christmas reading list.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unexpectedly touching aviation/suspense Christmas story, December 20, 1998
This review is from: The Shepherd (Audio Cassette)
Christmas eve, 1960 or thereabouts. Night over the North Sea. A young RAF pilot, flying his jet fighter home from Germany for the holidays, suddenly finds himself with no radio and no navigation aids, dwindling fuel supplies, and no way to find an airfield in an English countryside shrouded in night and heavy cloud. In an aircraft whose design would make bailing out an act of suicide, no way to call for help, and too little fuel to return to Germany, he realizes that he is, quite simply--barring a miracle--doomed. But Christmas has been, after all, a season of miracles for tellers of stories for a thousand years, and in Forsyth's short story, the unfolding of this young man's otherwise inexplicable salvation, with supernatural echoes of Ernest Gann's notion of aviation's Band of Brothers, touches the heart. It's an aviation story even for those with no interest in flying, a mystery/suspense story even for those indifferent to the genre, a wonderful read for all ages--and above all a tale that finally it reveals itself, in literally its last lines, for what it is: a genuine, involuntary-intake-of-breath, lump-in-the-throat, tears-in-the-eyes Christmas story. From Frederick Forsyth?? Believe it! Read it in an hour this season, even if you never thought you'd read Forsyth, and prepare to be moved.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Christmas ghost story, February 13, 1999
This review is from: The Shepherd (Audio Cassette)
I usually read a book and give it away or donate it to the library, but this is one I've kept for over 20 years and have read many times. It's simple and its imagery is so vivid I am amazed by Forsyth's talent. Having been a military officer and having spent a lot of time on lonely assignments, plus having spent holidays far from home, I think that all these things combined to put me in a position to appreciate Forsyth's little gem. The Shepherd is one of my favorite books...and normally I don't read too much fiction, but I've definitely made an exception in this case.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An annual, holiday "must listen to" yarn., February 9, 2004
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This review is from: The Shepherd (Audio Cassette)
Each year, around Christmas, I look forward to this wonderful, suspense-filled tale, along with IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE and A CHRISTMAS STORY - "No,it'll put your eye out!" The descriptive language and sound effects put you right inside the cockpit of the Vampire fighter with the Goblin, Rolls Royce engines. The action takes place on Christmas Eve,1957. A routine one-hour flight from Germany to England. This is just like a "Twilight Zone" episode on cassette. Did the events take place....or not? Thoroughly entertaining.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars You'll read it again, March 12, 2005
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This review is from: The Shepherd (Hardcover)
Twenty five years after I read it for the first time, this story still hits home. In the midst of warmth and security, a pilot's world unravels. And in despair, his simplified prayer to God results in a supernatural rescue. In a world of increasing technology and science, it reminds us of the essence of humanity. Hope for the future, fear of death, you'll read it again and again. Buy it and savor it. Then go and refuel your Mosquito and fly out to help someone home.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent Christmas Fantasy envolving a real problem, December 7, 1998
By 
Paul Grose (Shenandoah Virginia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Shepherd (Hardcover)
Having flown a vampire jet fighter myself for several years in the Canadian airforce; I feel confident that Forsyth actually flew a Vampire at some time. The details he gives of the aircraft and flying it, reveal a thorough knowledge of the aircraft. The problem around which the story revolves, was a real one, that I always feared myself, when flying the aircraft on instruments.

Forsyth's mastery of the `short story', combined with his overall writing genius, mark `The Shepherd' as a Christmas treat no one should miss.

The story can be read in much less than an evening and a friend of mine reads it every Christmas Eve to his family.

Although I am not a mystic, I still enjoy such stories involving miracles, especially at Christmas.

I hope it will be reprinted again soon.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cold war remembered., November 28, 2000
By 
Hal Bingaman (Ashland, Oregon United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Shepherd (Audio Cassette)
For those of us who flew for NATO in the Fifties, this is priceless remembrance. Forsyth seats us in single-seater solitude of nighttime peril. This little book treats a reader of any age to the cold war's privations, its simple joys, and its connections to WW-II: Nothing surpasses the adrenalin flow of a blackout emergency, in a "hairy" night-weather experience. And sometimes nothing tastes better than scrambled eggs and wine, even on Christmas Eve. I'm proud of Frederick Forsyth's recall, and imagination, for the best short story I've ever read.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Christmas miracle., September 7, 2005
By 
Michael G. "mikefromrochester" (Rochester, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Shepherd (Hardcover)
The legendary Frederick Forsyth uses his considerable storytelling skill to relate this short but powerful tale. A young RAF fighter pilot becomes lost in the fog on his way home for the Christmas holiday. Just as he is about to run out of fuel, another plane miraculously appears and guides him to safety.

The Shepherd is a very well written, haunting short story. One that would have made an excellent episode of The Twilight Zone or perhaps Alfred Hitchcock's old series.
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The Shepherd
The Shepherd by Frederick Forsyth (Hardcover - July 19, 1984)
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